Friday, October 22, 2010

Home Again, Home Again

It turned out that life could indeed be that good. We returned to Victoria under brilliant sunshine. Marc collected us at the airport after turning on the power and water at Ontario Street. He knows my appalling weakness for cheezies and hickory sticks: a bag on the main floor, another upstairs on my desk. Doug Hensby prepared a 4-star feast of Indian cookery; he and Jacqui entertained us with tales of their recent adventure in the Middle East. On Sunday Mary and Mike led us on a new route into the Sooke Hills. The weather was ideal, our friends’ boon companionship a match. More than once the sign on Bob Nagel’s kitchen wall came to mind: These Are The Good Old Days.

Warmly welcomed by west-coast pals we haven’t seen in months, we imagine, like Sally Field accepting her Oscar, that maybe a few folks out here like us a bit. I communed happily with old friends, Al Carver and Tim Leadem. Jan revels in the James Bay nest-box: unlike ‘Bigador’ it has power, central heating, hot running water. But she doesn’t linger long: pals who quilt and those who play bridge lure her away. Meanwhile I immerse myself in WWI projects, reading and grazing the Internet for fresh gold.

Victoria looks swell in late-October light. We seek variety on our before-breakfast walks and catch up on the changes that five months have wrought in the local landscape. Clover Point drew us, not just for a look at autumn shorebirds and gulls but to cross paths with old pal Ron Satterfield.

On Tuesday Steve Nash commences his fifteenth NBA season. It so happens his Phoenix Suns open just down the road, In Portland. I have never seen Victoria’s – and Canada’s – pride-and-joy in the flesh. We decided to remedy that. We head to Portland Monday, will spend a couple of days at the Benson, prowl the city, head south for a reunion with Terri and Ed, look for suitable birding opportunities along the way.

Alan

Friday, October 15, 2010

And Then There Were None

The gate is closed on another season at Big Bras d’Or. We departed Wednesday morning and are now enjoying Donnie and Nancy’s hospitality at the Black Rock Shangri-la on Minas Basin. Doris is nearby, in Truro. We’re happy to report that mi madre continues to soar. Yesterday we went out on the town with the old girl, making pigs of ourselves at a good Italian restaurant.

The last year or so has brought a worrisome lean to the ancient outhouse. Fearful that a rambunctious BM might deliver someone on an unwanted ride into the Great Bras d’Or, I spent a day jacking up the comfort station, removing the old posts – just as well since one of them was reduced pretty much to dust below ground – and replacing them with creosoted railway ties that should last a good deal longer than I will. The day’s exertions left me wearily aware that a 63-year-old body is no facsimile of the 20-something version that built the outhouse back in the early 70s.

October delivered peace and quiet just as sublime as that we enjoyed in May but evening arrived far sooner. Stillness was broken occasionally, by honking formations of Canada geese, wing-whistling surf scoters massed on the saltchuck opposite the cabin, noisy woodpeckers – pileated and hairy – hollering from the woods. Warmed by the Drolet woodstove we pigged out on Lee Child ‘Jack Reacher’ novels, exhausting most of the Cape Breton regional library system’s entire supply.

October is Celtic Colours time. The annual music festival is always a guaranteed good time and this year was no exception. We enjoyed Lennie Gallant, Old Man Leudecke and others at Boularderie school and an Irish-themed evening at Lower River Inhabitants with Liz Doherty et al. What we liked best were two free events at Knox Church in Baddeck, where CBC Cape Breton hosts daily two-hour recording sessions. We especially liked Scot guitarist Tony McManus and the PEI Acadian group Vishten.

We’re back in Victoria on Saturday, enjoying a notion that a few folks might be happy to have us back: bro-in-law Marc promises to retrieve us from the airport, pal Doug Hensby will produce a feast of Indian food mere hours after we’re back. Will Mary and Mike have a hike planned for Sunday morning? Surely life can’t be that good.

Alan

Friday, October 1, 2010

Doris Leaps Over Tall Buildings

Well, maybe not tall buildings. En route back to Cape Breton from the Ireland trip the Dingle walkers – all four of us – stopped to visit Doris in her new digs in a seniors building at Truro. The dear old thing was released from hospital and has been in Truro about two weeks. Appropriately, she gives highest praise to my sisters for their above-and-beyond efforts in organizing the move from Halifax while I indulged myself in Ireland.

Mum is doing remarkably well and doing so far faster than I ever expected when I saw her in hospital September 9. She uses a walker but gets about very quickly. Her weight plummeted to 85 lbs in hospital. No typo – 85 lbs. She has regained a little at Truro and I dearly hope she recovers more soon. Best of all, the dear old thing has a marvellous positive attitude about her new circumstances. She accepted an invite to participate in a card tourney. She won. Yesterday she recited several of Robert Louis Stevenson’s poems from a Child’s Garden of Verses. From memory.

Jan and I depart from Halifax for Victoria October 16. We will drive to Truro a couple of days ahead to see my mother, play a few games of cribbage, and stuff her full of truffles and her favourite ripple chips.

Those of her friends who desire to stay in touch will want her new address:
Parkland Truro Edinburgh Hall
#305, 356 Young Street
Truro NS B2N 3Y6

Her phone number is 902-843-3814.

Irish Luck

We are back on the left side of the Atlantic after an 8-day, 150 km tramp with Lynn and Louise along Ireland’s Dingle Way, five more days on the road in a rented Skoda Octavia and two wandering the streets of Dublin by shank’s mare. We were blessed: Serendipity arrived early and stayed late. As if leprechauns were looking after us. Prepared for rain, the weather proved far better than we feared, nearly as blithe as we dared hope.

Our Canadian red-maple walking sticks and the twins’ trademark rubber boots attracted attention wherever we tramped. We identified 65 bird species during the Dingle walk, none more special than the remarkable chough, a reckless red-billed aerialist that frequents dramatic coastal cliffs. On the flanks of Dingle’s Mount Eagle we watched more than a dozen impersonating WWI dogfighters, hurling themselves earthward at top speed, averting disaster only at the last moment.

At Anascaul I chanced upon a statue honouring Tom Crean, a real-life, unassuming hero of four British Antarctic expeditions, someone I knew about from my reading on the subject. Across the road is the South Polar Inn which houses a pub Crean himself operated between the world wars. Surrounded by old Antarctic photos and memorabilia, we had fish-and-chips washed down with draught Guinness. I was happy as can be.

Serendipity delivered two new friends: affable Yanks Rick and David, also on a Dingle walkabout. We deviated from our prescribed route to follow them on theirs, over a mountain, Cruach Mharthain. Turned out to be the best day of the entire Dingle walk.

Years ago a Boston neighbour of Bob Nagel’s gave him a homemade CD of Irish songs featuring a voice evoking a Humvee rumbling over coarse gravel. I like the unknown voice a lot. Walking into a Killarney pub I heard it rendering a familiar song, Dirty Old Town. I demanded identification. A customer at the bar said the voice belonged to an Irish institution, the late Ronnie Drew of the Dubliners. The barkeep directed me to a music store around the corner where I could procure as much Ronnie Drew as I liked. I did.

At Lispole a friendly shopkeeper gave us an events calendar that led us to a folk concert at St. James Church, Dingle. The evening of vocals, fiddle, guitar, uilleann pipe and low whistle was a musical feast.

Other feasts surpassed expectation too. At Dingle we were led to a diner, Out of the Blue, claiming it doesn’t open its doors if it doesn’t have the finest fresh seafood to offer. We all chose squid and decided it couldn’t possibly be beaten. Then it was, by the seafood stew at Bianconi’s in Killorglin along the Ring of Kerry. And again by the crab claws at Monk’s in Ballyvaughan on Galway Bay.

We time-travelled. To 1916 and the Easter Rising in Dublin; to the General Post Office where bullet holes still evoke the heady days of April when republicans briefly held off the British Army. And dreary Kilmainham Jail where 14 were executed by firing squad in May. We travelled to 1690 and the site of the Battle of the Boyne, the “eye of the storm of Irish history”. To Monasterboice where elaborate high Celtic crosses have stood for ten centuries. To Knowth where ancient people built great mounds three thousand years BC, decorating them with a quarter of Europe’s known Neolithic stone art. Even further back, to the portal dome at Poulnablone which has stood a thousand times longer than I have cluttered planet Earth.

Serendipity abandoned us only at the end. We arrived early at the Dublin airport for our Air Canada flight. Trouble was, there was no Air Canada flight, neither ours nor any other that day. Nor was there an Air Canada counter to raise an alarm. We might still be wandering the airport, abject and helpless, but for this: one of our quartet is a genius. Jan somehow deduced we were meant to fly British Midlands –- who else could have figured it out? –- an Air Canada partner in Star Alliance. We made it to Heathrow late, found fresh trouble: landing in Terminal 1, we had to get to Terminal 3, fast. By running and with the aid of shuttle bus Jan and I made it with three minutes to spare but where were the twins? We’d lost them. As I’m about to panic, a tap on the shoulder –- Louise. She and her twin had got there on footspeed alone, no shuttle. On the flight to Toronto I de-stressed on a combination of plentiful French wine and egregiously violent movies. But trouble wasn’t over. At Toronto our Airbus 320 was disabled by mechanical problems. Delay. We were squeezed into a 319. I couldn’t escape into my latest Jack Reacher novel because the overhead light didn’t work. Landed late in Halifax and one last problem: two pieces of baggage missing. Briefly, I vowed never to fly again.

Now we are back in the Cape Breton woods and all is calm again. October peace-and-quiet is every bit as sublime as that which greeted us in May. But daylight is in shorter supply. We have decided to take a break from intensive travel and will return the easy way, by air –- gulp –- rather than truck and camper. Our ETA in Victoria is the afternoon of October 16. Friends and creditors can look for us starting then.

Alan